
Curriculum Vitae Dr. Prateep Kumar Nayak Assistant Professor School for Environment, Enterprise and Development Faculty of Environment, University of Waterloo 200 University Avenue West, Waterloo, ON N2L3G1 Office: EV3 4221 Telephone: 519-888-4567 X. 33112 Fax: 519-746-0292 Email: [email protected] EDUCATION PhD in Natural Resources and Environmental Management (Interdisciplinary), Natural Resources Institute, University of Manitoba, Canada, 2011. Certificate in Higher Education Teaching (CHET), University of Manitoba, Canada, 2011. Masters in Natural Resources Management (MNRM), Natural Resources Institute, University of Manitoba, Canada, 2006. Post Graduate Diploma in Rural Development (recognised as MA in Sociology), Xavier Institute of Social Service, India, 1994. BA (Honours) in Political Science, Sambalpur University, India, 1991. AWARDS, DISTINCTIONS AND FELLOWSHIPS Best Early Career Scientist Award in recognition of commitment and dedication to outstanding scientific research, Integrated Marine Biogeochemistry and Ecosystem Research Group (IMBER) at the IMBIZO III conference (2013 - 2014) Banting Fellow, Social Science and Humanities Research Council, Canada (2012 - 2014) Governor General’s Academic Gold Medal, University of Manitoba, Canada (2012) Harvard Giorgio Ruffolo Doctoral Fellow in Sustainability Science, Center for International Development, Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University, USA, (2010) Trudeau Scholar, Doctoral Scholarship, Pierre Elliott Trudeau Foundation, Canada (2006- 2010) Faculty of Graduate Studies Travel Award, University of Manitoba, Canada (2009 and 2011) University of Manitoba Graduate Fellowship, University of Manitoba, Canada, (2009, Declined) Page 1 of 14 CGIAR - CAPRi PhD Field-Research Fellowship, International Food Policy Research Institute, USA, (2006, Declined) Alfred H. Shephard Scholarship, St John’s College, University of Manitoba, Canada, (2006, Declined) Faculty of Graduate Studies Travel Award, University of Manitoba, Canada (2006, Declined) International Graduate Student Award, University of Manitoba, Canada (2005) Donnie Eastwood Memorial Bursary, St John’s College, University of Manitoba, Canada (2005) Graduate Research Fellowship, Canada Research Chair in Community-Based Resource Management (2004 - 2006) RESEARCH GRANTS AND SCHOLARLY ASSIGNMENTS Indigenous Peoples from the Global Commons: Networking for Social and Environmental Sustainability. SSHRC Connection Grant, Co-applicant, 50,000 (2015 - 2016). Monsoon Harvests in rapidly changing landscapes: Understanding the role of the ancient tank irrigation systems in increasing climate change adaptability. UW Water Institute Seed Grant, Canada. Co-applicant, 20,000 (2015 - 2016). Monsoon Harvests: Understanding the role of the ancient tank irrigation system in increasing climate change adaptability in rapidly changing landscapes. University of Waterloo – International Research Partnership Grant, Canada. Co-applicant, 20,000 (2015 - 2016). Fishing for Power: Understanding the Paradox of Marginalisation through Local Metaphors and Political Ecology Narratives. UW SSHRC Travel Award, Canada. Applicant, 2200 (2015 - 2016). Living with Climate Change: Mapping Experience and Adaptation in the Global South and North. Partnership Development Grant, SSHRC, Canada. Co-applicant, $200,000 (2013 - 2015) Social-Ecological Change, Thresholds and Governance in Aquatic-Terrestrial Systems. SSHRC, Canada. Additional funding from University of Waterloo through the Office of the Provost and the Canada Excellence Research Chair (CERC) in Ecohydrology, $165,000 (2012 - 2015). Consultant / Author, Governance of Tenure for Responsible Capture Fisheries, A UN/FAO Fisheries and Aquaculture Department Initiative, Rome. USD 4000 (2011). Sustainability as connectedness: Conceptualizing the human-environment connections. Sustainability Science Program, Harvard University, USA. USD 25,000 (2010). Community-based Management and Social Justice. Doctoral Scholarship, Pierre Elliott Trudeau Foundation, Canada. $200,000 (2006 - 2010). Ford Foundation Grant to Individuals for Research and Training, New Delhi, India. USD 11,000 (1999 - 2003). Page 2 of 14 REFEREED PUBLICATIONS Journal Articles Nayak, P. K., D. Armitage and M. Andrachuk. 2015. Power and politics of social–ecological regime shifts in the Chilika lagoon, India and Tam Giang lagoon, Vietnam. Regional Environmental Change Online First: DOI 10.1007/s10113-015-0775-4 Nayak, P. K., L. E. Oliveira, and F. Berkes. 2014. Resource degradation, marginalization, and poverty in small-scale fisheries: threats to social-ecological resilience in India and Brazil. Ecology and Society 19(2): 73. http://dx.doi.org/10.5751/ES-06656-190273 Nayak, P. K. 2014. The Chilika Lagoon social-ecological system: an historical analysis. Ecology and Society 19(1): 1. http://dx.doi.org/10.5751/ES-05978-190101 Weeratunge, N., C. Bene, R. Siriwardane, A. Charles, D. Johnson, E. H. Allison, P. K. Nayak and M. Badjeck. 2014. Small-scale fisheries through the wellbeing lens. Fish and Fisheries 15(2): 255-279 (Online First, DOI: 10.1111/faf.12016 in 2013) Nayak. P. K. and F. Berkes. 2014. Linking global drivers with local and regional change: A social- ecological system approach in Chilika Lagoon, Bay of Bengal. Regional Environmental Change 14(6): 2067-2078 (Online First, DOI 10.1007/s10113-012-0369-3 in 2012) Haque, E., M. S. Uddin and P. K. Nayak. 2012. Adoption of Sustainable Forest Management Criteria and Indicators in South Asia. International Journal on Environmental Consumerism 8: 35-44 Nayak, P. K. and F. Berkes. 2011. Commonisation and decommonisation: Understanding the processes of change in Chilika Lagoon, India. Conservation and Society 9 (2): 132-145 Robson, J. P. and P. K. Nayak. 2010. Rural out-migration and resource dependent communities: Lessons from Mexico and India. Population and Environment 32: 263–284 Nayak, P. K. and F. Berkes. 2010. Whose marginalisation? Politics around environmental injustices in India’s Chilika Lagoon. Local Environment 15 (6): 553–567 Nayak, P. K. and F. Berkes. 2008. Politics of Co-optation: Community forest management vs. joint forest management in Orissa, India. Environmental Management 41(5): 707–718 Nayak, P. K. and C. E. Haque. 2005. Institutional approaches in natural resources management and sustainability: Lessons from joint forest management policy of India. International Journal on Environmental Consumerism 1(1): 37 - 46 Nayak, P. K. 2004. Adaptive community forest management: An alternate paradigm. Forests, Trees and Livelihoods 14 (2/3/4): 199-216 Nayak, P. K. 2003. Community-based forest management in India: The significance of tenure. Forests, Trees and Livelihoods 13: 135-160 Books and Book Chapters Page 3 of 14 Nayak, P. K. 2015. Institutional Pluralism, Multilevel Arrangements and Polycentricism: The Case of Chilika Lagoon, India. In: M. Bavinck A. and A. Jyotishi (eds.) Conflict, Negotiations and Natural Resource Management: A legal pluralism perspective from India. London: Routledge. pp. 148-177. Nayak, P. K. (In review). Fisher Communities in Transition: Understanding Change From a Livelihood Perspective. In: P. K. Nayak and S. Coulthard (eds.) Living with environmental change: An analysis of social-ecological adaptations in lagoon systems across the world. The Netherlands: Springer. Armitage, D., Alexander, S., Andrachuk, M., Berdej, S., Dyck, T., Nayak, P. K., Pittman, J., and Rathwell, K. (Revised and resubmitted). Emerging concepts in adaptive management. In C. Allen, A. Garmestani, and C. Smith, (eds.) Adaptive Management of Natural Resources in Theory and Practice. Berlin: Springer. Nayak, P. K. 2011. Change and marginalization: Livelihoods, commons institutions and environmental justice in Chilika Lagoon, India. Thesis (PhD). University of Manitoba, Canada. Online: http://hdl.handle.net/1993/5032 Nayak, P. K. 2007. Adaptive community forest management: Some emerging trends in India. In: Lebel, L., X. Jianchu and A. Contreras (eds). Institutional Dynamics and Stasis: How Crisis Alter the Way Common Pool Resources are Perceived, Used and Governed. Volume III. Thailand: RCSD Series on Politics of Commons. pp. 89-109 Rai, A., A. Nayak, M. R. Mishra, N. M. Singh, P. K. Nayak, S. Mohanty, and Y. G. Rao. 2002. Gadabanikilo - An example of community forest management with a difference. In: Ravindranath, N., H, K. S. Murali and K. C. Malhotra (eds.) Joint Forest Management and Community Forestry in India: An Ecological and Institutional Assessment. New Delhi, India: Oxford and IBH Publishing Singh, N. M. and P. K. Nayak. 2001. Up from the roots: Regenerating Dhani forest through community action. In: World Resources 2000-2001. People and Ecosystems: The Fraying Web of Life. Washington, DC: World Resources Institute. pp. 181-192 Nayak, P. K. 2001. United they work. In: Agarwal, A., S. Narain and I. Khurana (eds). Making Water Everybody’s Business: Practice and Policy of Water Harvesting. New Delhi, India: Center for Science and Environment Other Publications Nayak, P. K. and Armitage, D. 2015. Towards a social-ecological conception of regime shifts. An academic poster. Integrated Marine Biogeochemistry and Ecosystem Research (IMBER) / IMBIZO IV Conference, Trieste, Italy, October 2015. Nayak, P. K. 2013. Social-ecological change, thresholds and governance in aquatic-terrestrial systems. Integrated Marine Biogeochemistry and Ecosystem Research Newsletter. Issue 24: 16-20. Nayak, P. K. 2011. Conditions for Governance of tenure in lagoon social-ecological
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